My love bound me with a kiss That I should no longer stay; When I felt so sweet a bliss I had less power to part away: Alas! that woman doth not know Kisses make men loath to go. Yet she knows it but too well, For I heard when Venus' dove In her ear did softly tell That kisses were the seals of love: O muse not then though it be so; Kisses make men loath to go. Wherefore did she thus inflame My desires, heat my blood, Instantly to quench the same, And starve whom she had given food? I the common sense can show; Kisses make men loath to go. Had she bid me go at first It would ne'er have grieved my heart, Hope delayed had been the worst; But ah! to kiss and then to part! How deep it struck, speak, gods, you know Kisses make men loath to go. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IF by EDWARD JAMES MORTIMER COLLINS LOVE TO THE CHURCH by TIMOTHY DWIGHT DYING SPEECH OF AN OLD PHILOSOPHER by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR BLACK AND BLUE EYES by THOMAS MOORE HIC JACET by LOUISE CHANDLER MOULTON THE REAR-GUARD by SIEGFRIED SASSOON SONNET: 130 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE |